Homily - 18th Sunday in OT - Year A,
Buzzword - Balance: Life cannot be lived without a sense of balance.
Moments of madness may intrude from time to time, but, always, one is brought
back to earth - sometimes with a thump - by the recognition that if life is to
be lived responsibly and fruitfully, then it must be lived in terms of balanced
decisions.
Isaiah 55; 1-3: This passage was written by the prophet to assure the
Jewish exiles in the Babylonian captivity that liberation would come by the
power of God. This liberation is depicted, as it often is in the Old Testament,
in terms of abundance of the good things of life.
Romans 8; 35, 37 - 39: St. Paul, with a much deeper insight than the
earlier religious writers, presents Christ as a source of constancy in the face
of adversity and balance in the face of success.
Matthew 14; 13-21: This passage portrays Christ as having compassion for
the people and His expectation that His disciples would help to relieve the
people's hunger. But it not only the physical hunger that needs to be satisfied;
there is also a spiritual hunger to be satisfied, ultimately, by Christ's
presence in the Eucharist.
Point 1: One of the areas in which we are called upon to make balanced
decisions is that involving our needs and our wants. In our society, we hear a
great deal from our advertising gurus about all the commodities without which
our lives will be miserable - things that go "uumph" in the night" and "Ow! What
a feeling" etc., etc. Then we have other voices warning us of the dangers of
consumerism and materialism exposing us to heightened cholesterol and pimply
complexions! The point is soon reached where one can only conclude that all the
things we want are either sinful or fattening! The fact is that we are a
creative people and what we produce needs to find a market. But we are not just
creatures of comfort to be satisfied only by satisfying our material needs;
there are other areas of living to be considered if fulfilled living is to be
achieved. We have intelligence to be developed, emotions to be expressed and
questions to be answered. We are people for whom satisfaction is achieved where
the needs of body and soul are met. "Man does not live on bread alone"! And St.
Augustine's profound comment in his "Confessions" - "You have made us for
yourself, O Lord, and our heart can never rest until it rests with You".
Point 2: This is not to say that the religious person becomes passive
in the face of life's realities. A constant jibe that one hears -"Your reward
will be great"; "Pie in the sky"; "Religion - opium of the masses" are common
misrepresentations of the religious attitude. And they certainly do not reflect
true history. Few revolutionaries, if any, have left their mark on history as
has Christ with his insistence on the rights and responsibilities people have
because they are "children of God". And, although the individual abilities of
people will generate differences among people, these differences will be
balanced out in eternity where each will be asked to account for the use of the
talent with which he or she has been endowed. It is this Faith and this Hope
that can bring constancy and balance to a person's attitudes in dealing with the
decisions and inequalities of daily living.
Conclusion: No! The Christian, particularly, is not an inactive
passenger in any community. The servant who buried his talent rather than
employing it was condemned; but, even if our personal talents do not run to
changing the course of history, they are always sufficient to make changes in
ourselves. In the words of the ancient prayer:
"Give me the strength to change what can be changed; the courage to accept
what cannot be changed; and the wisdom to know the difference!"